| Literature DB >> 15555826 |
Abstract
Diagnostic tests for the detection of the etiologic agent of pneumonia are neither recommended nor done for most outpatients with CAP (Table 4).Most of these patients have no clear diagnosis but seem to do well with empiric antibiotic treatment, which often costs less than the diagnostic tests. For hospitalized patients, a pre-treatment blood culture and an expectorated sputum gram stain and culture should be done. Testing for Legionella spp is appropriate in hospitalized patients, especially those who are seriously ill. New tests that merit use in selected patients are the urinary antigen assay for S pneumoniae and the PCR test for L pneumophila. Anticipated developments in the near future are PCR tests for detection of C pneumoniae and M pneumoniae.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15555826 PMCID: PMC7118911 DOI: 10.1016/j.idc.2004.08.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Clin North Am ISSN: 0891-5520 Impact factor: 5.982
Quality of sputum sample
| Reference | Method | Minimum criteria |
|---|---|---|
| SEC/LPF | <10 SEF | |
| PMNs/LPF | >25 PMN | |
| SEC/LPF | <25 SEC | |
| SEC: PMNs ratio | >10 PMN/SEC | |
| SEC + bacteria | <10 SEC + bacteria |
Abbreviation: SEC, squamous epithelial cells.
Diagnosis of Legionnaires' disease
| Test | Time | Sample | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Culture | 3–7 d | LRT | <10–80 | 100 | Detects all strains |
| DFA stain | <4 h | LRT | 25–70 | >95 | Technically demanding |
| Urine antigen | <1 h | Urine | 70–90 | >99 | Detects only |
| PCR | <4 h | LRT | 80–100 | >90 | Detects |
Abbreviations: DFA, direct immunofluorescent antibody; LRT, lower respiratory tract specimen; NPS, nasopharyngeal swab.
Adapted from Murdoch DR. Diagnosis of Legionella infection. Clin Infect Dis 2003;36:64.
Expectorated sputum, bronchoscopic aspirate, nasotracheal suction specimen.
Sensitivity of the Legionella spp urinary antigen assay
| Category | No. of positive cultures | No. of urinary antigen |
|---|---|---|
| Community acquired | 214 | 172 (80%) |
| Travel associated | 169 | 159 (94%) |
| Nosocomial | 89 | 40 (45%) |
Adapted from Helbig JH, Uldum SA, Bernander S, et al. Clinical utility of urinary antigen detection for diagnosis of community-acquired, travel-associated, and nosocomial Legionnaires' disease. J Clin Microbiol 2003;41:838–40.
Pathogen detection
| Organism | Pulmonary specimen (usual) | Microscopy (stain) | Culture | Serology | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | |||||
| Aerobes | Sputum, bronch, blood | Gram | Conventional | — | |
| Anaerobes | TTA, pleural fluid | Gram | Anaerobic media | — | — |
| | Sputum, bronch blood | FA ( | Selective media | IFA | Urinary Ag: |
| | NPS, sputum, bronch | — | (Cell culture) | CF: | PCR (experimental) |
| | NPS, sputum | — | (Culture) | CF, EIA | PCR (experimental) |
| Mycobacteria | Sputum, bronch | AFB | Selective media | — | PCR |
| Viruses | |||||
| Influenza | NPS or aspirate | FA | (Cell culture) | CF, EIA, FA, LA | Rapid Ag detection |
| RSV | NPS | FA (pediatric only) | (Cell culture) | — | — |
| Paraflu | NPS | — | (Cell culture) | — | — |
| SARS | NPS | — | (Cell culture) | — | PCR (experimental) |
Abbreviations: AFB, acid-fast stain; Ag, antigen; bronch, bronchoscopy aspirate or BAL; CF, complement fixation; EIA, enzyme immunoassay; FA, fluorescent antibody; IFA, immunofluorescence assay; LA, latex agglutination; MIF, microimmunofluorescence assay; NPS, nasopharyngeal swab; SG, serogroup.
Entries in parentheses are not usually available.